Las Vegas Review-Journal

■ With French borders closed to all U.K. traffic, Britons may have glimpsed what is to come.

French border closure puts 6K trucks on hold

- By Jill Lawless

LONDON — For some British truckers, retailers and traders, a feared New Year’s nightmare arrived early.

“French borders closed,” signs on roads approachin­g the English Channel port of Dover flashed Monday, steering truck drivers away as traffic backed up. British supermarke­ts warned that supplies of fresh produce could run short within days.

Businesses have spent months worrying about disruption at Britain’s borders when the U.K. makes a post-brexit economic break from the European Union at the end of the year. Monday’s mayhem, however, was caused by the coronaviru­s.

Early tracking of a COVID-19 variant that scientists think may spread more easily plunged southern England into lockdown and over the weekend prompted countries around the world to halt flights from the U.K. France went further and shut its border for at least 48 hours beginning Sunday night, stopping people and cargo vehicles entering by air, road, sea or rail.

The move left the 6,000 trucks that cross from England to France each day on ferries from Dover or on trains through the Eurotunnel stuck in England for now.

Port of Dover Chief Executive

Doug Bannister said that if the port is not reopened soon, there would be “quite a stark situation.”

French Transport Minister Jean-baptiste Djebbari said a new “health protocol” to be introduced within hours should allow shipments from the U.K. to resume. British officials said they were conferring urgently with their European counterpar­ts.

The delays were an early taste of what many businesses worry will happen on Jan. 1, when Britain leaves the EU’S economic structures, including its vast single market for goods. The break will mean new customs inspection­s and paperwork, and even worse disruption if the two sides don’t have a new trade agreement in place.

Trade negotiatio­ns that began after Britain formally left the EU on Jan. 31 have staggered on for months, with the two sides unable to bridge gaps over fair-competitio­n guarantees and European boats’ access to British fishing waters. With 10 days until the year-end deadline, both sides say it’s likely the talks will fail and there will be a bumpy “no-deal” British exit on Jan. 1.

The U.K. government’s “reasonable worst-case scenario” for post-brexit border disruption includes lines of 7,000 trucks near Dover and two-day waits to cross the English Channel.

Even if there is a trade deal, new inspection­s and red tape will bring delays. The government is building huge new truck parking depots and customs clearance sites around southeast England to ease the strain, though most are unfinished or behind schedule.

The border delays sent shivers of apprehensi­on around the U.K., including the fishing port of Brixham in southweste­rn England, where much of the local catch of crabs, scallops and other high-value seafood is exported to EU countries.

Many British fishermen back Brexit because they want to wrest control over U.K. fishing waters from the EU, but they also rely on access to the European market.

“Today is a prime example of what is in store for Brexit,” said fishing boat skipper Sean Beck. “If we can’t sell to Europe, we’re finished. There’s no future.”

 ?? Kirsty Wiggleswor­th The Associated Press ?? A security guard patrols the entrance to the ferry terminal in Dover, England on Monday after the port was closed and access to the Eurotunnel terminal was suspended. France banned all travel from the U.K. for 48 hours beginning at midnight Sunday.
Kirsty Wiggleswor­th The Associated Press A security guard patrols the entrance to the ferry terminal in Dover, England on Monday after the port was closed and access to the Eurotunnel terminal was suspended. France banned all travel from the U.K. for 48 hours beginning at midnight Sunday.

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